Tielman Susato arr. David Munrow : Twelve Dances from 'The Danserye' (1551)

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  • Опубліковано 6 сер 2024
  • I. La Mourisque 00:00-01:15
    II. Branle Quatre Bransles 01:15-02:55
    III. Ronde and Salterelle 02:55-04:30
    IV. Ronde Mon Amy 04:30-07:00
    V. Allemaigne and Recoupe 07:00-09:40
    VI. Pavane Mille Regretz 09:40-12:40
    VII. Basse Danse Bergeret sans Roch and Reprise 12:40-15:15
    VIII. Danse du Roy 15:15-16:35
    IX. Ronde 16:35-17:40
    X. Passe et Medio and Reprinse Le Pingue 17:40-20:20
    XI. Ronde 20:20-22:15
    XII. Pavane La Bataille 22:15-25:10
    Performed by the Early Music Consort of London directed by David Munrow.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 51

  • @jamesstoops2378
    @jamesstoops2378 2 місяці тому +1

    Recorded this onto a cassette in 1985 - lost it about five years later - great to hear it again - thanks

  • @christianlandaetatorres3836
    @christianlandaetatorres3836 Рік тому +2

    School days when we would listen to this as part of my music class. Thanks to a great Music teacher. R.I.P. David Munrow.

  • @danielbellanger4607
    @danielbellanger4607 4 роки тому +5

    La.musique.de.la.renaisance.me.rend.joyeux.et.plein.d.admiration.par.raport.a.notre.musique. d'aujourd'hui

  • @petegarvey9224
    @petegarvey9224 3 роки тому +4

    Wonderful stroll back to my uni days. Munrow really brought this music to life with his classic albums.

  • @maxmerry8470
    @maxmerry8470 5 років тому +15

    Now this is essential "Wake Up, Max" music! 6:50 A.M. in GB in the Year 2019......at least, I think it is! Ah, David Munrow is sadly missed. Time to follow his Renaissance Dance Band, tapping at my tambour as I go..........

  • @moyraannehuxtable4306
    @moyraannehuxtable4306 2 роки тому +3

    David Munroe was one of our greatest early music musician .

  • @TERRYBIGGENDEN
    @TERRYBIGGENDEN 3 роки тому +4

    A fantastic record. I;ve had it for many years, but haven't been able to play it (no turntable). Fabulous to hear it all again! :-)

  • @bernharddittmar563
    @bernharddittmar563 3 роки тому +1

    Thanks this great piece of ancient art😍😍😍

  • @ericwyness9089
    @ericwyness9089 3 роки тому +4

    Just delicious - this is great stuff !

  • @lubossuchanek3726
    @lubossuchanek3726 3 роки тому +2

    Bravo, bravissimo.

  • @odfoto
    @odfoto 3 роки тому +4

    Thans so very, very much for sharing! This album opened my interest for early music. I still own it, but alas no vinyl player. Same cover and all. I even remember the "overhearing" from the next turn of the vinyl on it (which in a way is not good, but precious to me!). And the all time favourite is Basse Dance Bergeret ..., renaissance rock n'roll :)

  • @Chicagoan444
    @Chicagoan444 Рік тому

    I love this music so much.

  • @dmntuba
    @dmntuba 3 роки тому +1

    LOVE IT!!!!
    As a brass player I grew up listening (PJBE) to, and performing 👍

  • @thewomandirector
    @thewomandirector 2 роки тому +1

    Wonderful!

  • @eporze
    @eporze Рік тому

    Preciosa interpretacio'n!!!!!!.-

  • @MrArtisticGenius
    @MrArtisticGenius 4 роки тому +27

    00:00 I. La Mourisque
    1:12 II. Branle Quatre Bransles
    2:53 III. Ronde and Salterelle
    4:28 IV. Ronde Mon Amy
    6:56 V. Allemaigne and Recoupe
    9:38 VI. Pavane Mille Regretz
    12:32 Bergerette sans roch
    15:11 VIII. Danse du Roy
    16:37 IX. Ronde
    17:35 IX. X. Passe et Medio and Reprinse Le Pingue
    20:18 XI. Ronde
    22:16 XII. Pavane La Bataille

    • @strugglingcollegestudent
      @strugglingcollegestudent 3 роки тому

      Where is Ronde II estoit une fillette
      And Ronde den 4th ronde? I’m asking for my music appreciation class lol

    • @MrArtisticGenius
      @MrArtisticGenius 3 роки тому +1

      @@strugglingcollegestudent This recording only contains 12 Dances, the original Danserye had 16 Dances, hence the missing Rondes. I can't find a David Munrow recording of the missing 4 pieces. There are other artists' recordings of the 4 dances on UA-cam, if you just search for "Susato" + [Dance title].

  • @jackjc1447
    @jackjc1447 3 роки тому +2

    mike oldfield recorded a beautiful rendition of "ronde and salterelle" under the name "wrekorder wrondo"
    in 1978.

  • @WarriorKingT22
    @WarriorKingT22 Рік тому

    Excellent!

  • @espermachinemusic
    @espermachinemusic 2 роки тому +1

    Delightful

    • @espermachinemusic
      @espermachinemusic 2 роки тому

      If Oliver Cromwell had a band for his military unit.

  • @westcountrypastygalloper8747

    Trippy.

  • @Atrux1
    @Atrux1 3 роки тому +1

    How these things were supposed to be danced? Its really hard for me to imagine that from 2021 !

    • @TERRYBIGGENDEN
      @TERRYBIGGENDEN 3 роки тому

      People have very different interpretations-the tempi can vary a lot in performance. There were many standard dances of the time though and I thnki you will find some examples here on You Tube with contemporary performances. :-)

    • @Mnnvint
      @Mnnvint Місяць тому

      It's easier to imagine with some recordings... Convivium Musicum Gothenburgense, "At the Sign of the Crumhorn" plays them a lot more danceable IMO. But this is nice too.

  • @Jeffertonian
    @Jeffertonian 2 роки тому

    I still have some tapes taken off BBC Radio3 when David Munrow had a regular slot in the last century LOL

    • @sapper82
      @sapper82 2 роки тому

      Pied Piper. His early evening slot.

  • @bsontrop
    @bsontrop 3 роки тому +1

    Wake-Up, amen! @12:40, which one is that, Allemaigne and Recoupe? ,, or Basse Danse Bergeret sans Roch and Reprise? Will see how our 1.5 year old grandson takes to

    • @ericwyness9089
      @ericwyness9089 3 роки тому

      That's the "Basse Danse Bergeret et Reprise"

  • @lukedaniell
    @lukedaniell Рік тому

    12:40 / 20:18 / 22:16

  • @juliahart8593
    @juliahart8593 2 роки тому

    Who else listening for music appreciation class

  • @danawinsor1380
    @danawinsor1380 2 роки тому

    Is there a connection between David Munrow and Nick Drake? I wasn't sure why Drake is discussed on this thread.

    • @maxmerry8470
      @maxmerry8470 2 роки тому +2

      Only that both were very influential in their respective fields and also took their own lives while still relatively young. However, that came up in a private conversation between two listeners (one of whom was myself). It wasn't being presented as a definite connection between Drake and Munrow. More, if anything, a coincidence.

    • @doncharleslundell
      @doncharleslundell Рік тому

      He was. See above comments.

  • @javierguilbozal1664
    @javierguilbozal1664 2 роки тому

    Por no más anuncios

  • @belegarironhammer3200
    @belegarironhammer3200 2 роки тому +1

    pax germanicum.

  • @MrGer2295
    @MrGer2295 5 років тому +9

    SO BEAUTIFUL ! MANY THANKS @Rodders 💝 💝 💝 💝 💝

  • @tonyobadinage6647
    @tonyobadinage6647 5 років тому +19

    What is it about genius and the tortured soul? Munrow's legacy is there for all to see, for all to hear. The myriad of 'original instruments' bands and orchestras which appeared during the late 60s/early 70s is due, in no small measure, to the ground-breaking work of people like him; it's arguable that he changed the face of classical music and brought it up-to-date by taking the music back to its origins and paring it down to only the vital components, losing the superfluous sentimentality of over-orchestration in the process.
    His recorded output, whilst relatively small, is of a consistently high standard and one can only imagine and wonder at what achievements he might have made had he not taken his own life. And therein lies the crux; his mystique, his almost cult-like status, enhanced over the years, is such that it is his tragic early death which enshrines him in the pantheon of musical greats to the point where, more than forty years after he died, his is still the first name one thinks of when one talks of Renaissance Music.
    I very much link him with another tortured soul, operating in a different genre, who also took his own life around about the same time; Nick Drake. Drake's three albums are masterpieces with their, and his, reputations growing significantly since his untimely death.

    • @maxmerry8470
      @maxmerry8470 5 років тому +2

      Not stalking you, Tony, or trying to undermine your comment. Regarding Drake, whose three albums are, indeed, beautifully timeless, I understand his sister, Gabrielle, has always felt doubtful about his supposed suicide. Overdose? Unintentional? Who can ever tell? And, as his sister, I imagine she won't want to think of some desperate "aloneness" marking his final moments of life.

    • @tonyobadinage6647
      @tonyobadinage6647 5 років тому +2

      Max, did you ever see the documentary which was made, with her full support, about his life? I forget what it is called but it is on UA-cam.

    • @maxmerry8470
      @maxmerry8470 5 років тому +2

      Yes, some years ago now. I think, if my memory serves me well, that was where I detected her doubts. I remember also Brad Pitt's endorsement of Drake's music, adding to the mystique (not, as I recall, in the context of that documentary). A magic moment for me was on the Isle of Barra a few summers ago sitting in a small tearoom and hearing River Man being played over muted speakers. Had no choice but to engage the Asian proprietor in conversation about his choice of background listening. A diehard Scottish Nationalist, he waxed enthusiastically about what Nick Drake meant to him. My wife had to pull me away as we talked Drake and politics for rather a long time.......

    • @tonyobadinage6647
      @tonyobadinage6647 5 років тому +3

      A lovely story, Max, Drakes music touches the most unlikely people. "River Man" would probably be my favourite of his songs.

    • @doncharleslundell
      @doncharleslundell Рік тому +1

      The connection of Munrow to Drake is an apt one. Both tortured (and both under-appreciated). There is something in the melancholy of the music that also ties the two together.

  • @robcmstephens
    @robcmstephens 5 років тому +4

    Ah this is the first piece of music I can remember hearing in my life! Great musicality. Thank you to you for posting this and my parents for introducing my brother and I to the glorious life long treasure that is music !

    • @juliahart8593
      @juliahart8593 2 роки тому

      In your life??? That's amazing! For me it was those cheesy Mozart pieces they use for developing fetuses lol

  • @arturozeballos1
    @arturozeballos1 5 років тому +3

    Si bien se desconoce el lugar de nacimiento de Susato, algunos eruditos creen que debido a su nombre, Susato, que significa de Soest, de la ciudad de Soest , puede ser de la ciudad de ese nombre en Westfalia o de la ciudad de Soest en los Países Bajos.
    No se sabe mucho sobre su vida temprana, pero comienza a aparecer en varios archivos de Amberes de alrededor de 1530 trabajando como calígrafo e instrumentista: la trompeta , la flauta y la pipa de tenor se enumeran como instrumentos de su propiedad.
    En 1543, fundó la primera editorial musical que utiliza música de tipo móvil en los Países Bajos . Se le podía encontrar en Amberes, "En el signo del Crumhorn ". Hasta que Susato instaló su prensa en Amberes, la impresión musical se había hecho principalmente en Italia , Francia y Alemania . Poco después, a Susato se le unió Petrus Phalesius el Viejo en Lovaina y Christopher Plantin , también en Amberes, y los Países Bajos.Se convirtió en un centro regional de la publicación musical. Es posible que Susato también manejara un negocio de instrumentos musicales, e intentó varias veces asociarse con otros editores, pero ninguno tuvo éxito. En 1561, su hijo Jacob Susato, quien murió en 1564, se hizo cargo de su negocio editorial. Tielman Susato se mudó primero a Alkmaar , Holanda Septentrional, y luego a Suecia . El último registro conocido de él data de 1570.
    Susato también fue un compositor consumado. Escribió (y publicó) varios libros de masas y motetes que se encuentran en el estilo polifónico imitativo típico de la época. También escribió dos libros de canciones que fueron diseñados específicamente para ser cantados por cantantes jóvenes sin experiencia: son solo para dos o tres voces. Las publicaciones más importantes en términos de distribución e influencia fueron los Souterliedekens de Clemens non Papa , que eran ajustes métricos de salmo en holandés, que usaban las melodías de las canciones populares. Eran enormemente populares en los Países Bajos en el siglo XVI.
    Susato también fue un prolífico compositor de música instrumental, y gran parte de ella todavía está grabada y ejecutada en la actualidad. Produjo un libro de música de baile en 1551, Het derde Musyck boexken ... alderhande danserye , compuesto de piezas en un arreglo simple pero artístico. La mayoría de estas piezas son formas de danza ( alemandes , galliards , etc.).
    A menudo Susato dedicó sus publicaciones a los ciudadanos prominentes de la ciudad. A veces dedicaba un volumen entero a las obras de un compositor (por ejemplo, Manchicourt y Crecquillon ). No en vano, parece haber favorecido a otros compositores flamencos como temas de publicación. También fue uno de los primeros en publicar música del aclamado compositor del Renacimiento tardío Orlande de Lassus .

    • @doloreshernandez5149
      @doloreshernandez5149 3 роки тому

      Arturo, gracias por compartir tanta riqueza en detalles! Susato era entonces contemporaneo con René Descartes en esa era de Oro de arte y cultura filosófica y musical, y de teatro...Gracias por detallar la vida de Susato y de sus días de imprenta o prensa. Imaginese, vivir toda una vida dedicada no solo a tocar música, pero también a escribirla e imprentarla? Toda una vida de inspiración, arduo trabajo e invención. Y si, de esa manera vuelve a nacer el espíritu humano por medio del sacrificio de la creatividad...y de eso nace una flor...de música!

  • @legofanguyvid
    @legofanguyvid 4 роки тому

    20:16